Hi @chrisplyler
I see what you are saying.
I agree that certain issues have 'no perfect' solution, but for this particular discussion our Revit community has posted workarounds for the OP @jma2011 which he has tested. This follow-up is a mandatory 'Accepted solution' macro, not a form letter.
Let me explain why this the essence of the forums and is required for benefit of the community!
Imagine this scenario: We have all been there working on a project, deadline to be precise, stuck at a particular feature, frustration surmounts and we keep scrolling through zillions of forum posts but don't seem to land on a solution that actually works! (this discussion already occupies 2 pages). Marking 'accepted solutions' actually saves a great deal of time and energy for any frantic user! A user need not spend time going through All the threads!
We envision that this process enables users to get quick and easy access to a solution or at the most a close workaround. Hope that makes sense and thanks for understanding!
Best Regards,